It is essential to our democracy that government agencies remain accountable to the
people. When a state agency adopts a rule or regulation, it makes choices that affect
us in our daily lives, and I have always felt strongly that everyday people need to have
a voice in that process. For the past four years, I have worked hard to make that message
of accountability clear to unelected regulators.

This newsletter discusses some of the issues I have addressed during the first half of 2006,
along with some victories resulting from last year’s efforts. It also details 2006 legislative efforts
to make state agencies more open and accountable. I invite you to contact the Commission
office to learn more about these issues or to share your thoughts on other regulatory matters.

Very truly yours,
Ruben Diaz, Jr.

2006 Session
Accomplishments: Legislation

Regulatory Reform

The Administrative Regulations Review Commission (ARRC) is charged by law with
oversight of the rules and regulations adopted by New York State agencies, and with
developing and promoting new laws to reform the process used to create rules. Rules
and regulations have the force and effect of law, and often have a major impact on the
lives of New Yorkers.

In 2006, both houses of the Legislature passed a bill introduced by Assemblyman Diaz
to continue the process of regulatory reform. The bill, A.9598, builds on the changes
made to state law by one of Assemblyman Diaz’s successful 2005 bills. Last year’s
legislation, Chapter 441 of the Laws of 2005, eliminated useless paperwork in rule
adoptions to make it easier to adopt health and safety protections. The 2006 legislation
will finish the process of streamlining the rulemaking process. It passed the Assembly
and Senate unanimously and will be sent to the Governor in the near future.

Assemblyman Diaz also continued his efforts to have regulators consider the impact
of proposed rules on consumer prices. His bill, A.8061, would require an agency proposing
a rule change to determine if the action could result in changes in the prices paid by
consumers for goods or services, and the probable amount or range of such price changes.
The bill was not taken up in 2006 but will be a priority for next year.

Environmental Justice

For several years, it has been clear that greater attention must be focused on expanding
New York State’s adherence to principles of environmental justice. As Assemblyman Diaz
wrote in his comments on the Power Authority’s proposed rules
(see “Regulatory Issues” below): “Environmental justice represents
a philosophy that each person has an equal entitlement to share in the Earth’s natural
resources, without regard to skin color, heritage or net worth. Unfortunately, it has too often
been the case that economically challenged communities of color bear the brunt of the
pollution produced by our society.”

Hopes were raised when the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) announced
a new policy on environmental justice in permit cases in 2003. However, since then progress
has been slow at that agency and almost non-existent at other state agencies and public
authorities whose activities impact the environment. In addition to attempting to keep the
pressure on state agencies through his comments on environmental regulations,
Assemblyman Diaz has taken the lead in promoting legislation to move the State forward
in pursuing environmental justice.

In 2006, the Assembly again passed Assemblyman Diaz’s bill to identify those neighborhoods
that bear the highest burden of toxic exposure. The bill, A.5982,
would require DEC to compile and analyze pollution data and identify high local environmental
impact zones. It is currently in the Senate Environmental Conservation Committee.

The Assembly also gave passage to another Diaz bill on environmental justice.
A.4190 requires every state agency and public authority to
adopt a policy on environmental justice. It also creates a Permanent Environmental Justice
Advisory Group, made up of community-based organizations, environmentalists and business
and local government representatives, to guide the actions of state agencies and authorities
in this area. This bill was also referred to the Senate Environmental Conservation Committee.

Beyond these legislative efforts, the Assembly Chair of ARRC hopes to launch a review this fall
of what steps state agencies have been taking to promote environmental justice – and what
additional measures remain undone.

Freedom of Information Law (FOIL)

Last year, the Assembly ARRC Chairman took part in a report entitled
Needle in a Haystack - FOIL’s Subject Matter List:
Are Agencies Complying? The report found widespread noncompliance by state
agencies with FOIL’s requirement that they maintain current and reasonably detailed subject
matter lists of the types of records they possess. Some agencies had no lists, others had short lists
with little detail, and some had lists that were more than a dozen years out of date.

In 2006, Assemblyman Diaz introduced three bills based on the report’s recommendations.

These bills provide for general guidance to state agencies on how to develop and maintain informative
lists (A.10347), require subject matter lists to be posted on agency
websites (A.10349) and provide for online posting of other useful
information on FOIL, such as names and addresses of records access officers and how to request
records (A.10348). Enactment of these bills would make it easier
to obtain public information held by state agencies. Each of these bills passed the Assembly and
has been referred to the Senate Committee on Investigations and Government Operations.

The full Needle in a Haystack report can be accessed by
clicking here.

One of the most important activities of ARRC is to review the proposed and existing rules
and regulations of state agencies and, when they seem to be burdensome or illogical, to
seek changes. The Assembly Chair of ARRC frequently comments on proposed rules that
fail to follow the requirements of state law or to serve the public interest. While agencies
are usually not required to follow ARRC’s recommendations, many times common sense
prevails and the problems with the rules are fixed.

For example, last year Assemblyman Diaz challenged the Health Department’s basis for
a proposal to drastically reduce Medicaid utilization thresholds. The change would have
limited the health services available to a Medicaid recipient unless he or she was given
special clearance. Assemblyman Diaz objected that the regulations did not follow the law
or good medical practice. Ultimately, the agency let these rule changes expire without
further action

Assemblyman Diaz and his colleagues achieved a significant victory on another regulatory
issue raised in 2005. They had argued that there was no legal or factual justification for
proposed banking rules to raise the maximum fee consumers can be charged on a returned
item from $10 to $20, and to allow banks to charge even higher fees for small businesses.
The Assembly members felt that it added insult to injury to charge more than $10 to a victim
who was cheated into taking a bad check. The Banking Department agreed with the Assembly
comments and withdrew the amendment increasing the return item fee cap.

Assemblyman Diaz also wrote to the Department of State in 2005 to note his concerns on a
proposal to implement a new regulatory reform law he had sponsored. The law, Chapter 730
of the Laws of 2004, increased public access to the guidelines, memoranda and other guidance
documents relied on by state agencies. It required agencies to publish lists of all guidance
documents they rely on, either on a website or in the State Register. The Department had
proposed to exempt agencies that say they do not rely on any guidance documents, but
Assemblyman Diaz commented that unless the exempt agencies were identified, the public
would never be sure if they had been excused from compliance or were simply ignoring the law.
The agency agreed and added a commitment to identify exempt agencies to the final rule.

The following new regulatory issues were addressed in the first half of 2006:

Vehicle Inspection Stickers

In January, the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) began a new vehicle inspection sticker
program for upstate New York. The program, which had previously been used in the downstate
air quality region, involves punching not only the month of the inspection, but also one of three
areas on the windshield sticker, indicating in which third of the month (1st – 10th, 11th - 20th or
21st -31st) the vehicle had been checked. The validity of the sticker would expire in the following
year, on the last date in the third of the month indicated.

Although the program commenced on New Year’s Day, DMV did not even propose changes to its
rules to authorize it until later in January. Almost immediately, motorists in some upstate
communities began to complain. They did not believe that the justification for the change
outweighed the inconvenience to individuals and businesses, and they also were offended that
DMV had gone ahead with it without first consulting the public. In February, Assemblyman Diaz
joined several other Assemblymembers and Senators in relaying these objections to DMV. In
March, DMV withdrew the rules from further consideration and cancelled the program.

Freedom of Information Regulations

2006 saw continued efforts by state agencies to adjust their regulations implementing the Freedom
of Information Law (FOIL) to a new 2005 law requiring timely responses to requests for records.
Efforts by five related agencies headquartered in New York City drew the attention of Assemblyman Diaz
and the Chair of the Assembly Governmental Operations Committee, Assemblymember RoAnn M. Destito,
who voiced concerns in February over several proposed provisions that could allow those agencies to ignore
FOIL requests or to delay providing members of the public with copies of records. The agencies
(the Housing Finance Agency, Affordable Housing Corporation, Municipal Bond Bank Agency, State of
New York Mortgage Agency, and Tobacco Settlement Financing Corporation) are currently considering
a corrected redraft of their FOIL regulations.

Special Arbitration

Last year the Legislature enacted a new law (Chapter 452 of the Laws of 2005) containing several
provisions designed to unclog court calendars. One was transferring cases where two or more no-fault
auto insurers argue over which is liable for handling the claim of an injured party from the courts to a
special arbitration forum. The Legislature wanted to make it faster and easier for accident victims to
receive compensation and more difficult for insurers to duck responsibility for payment. However, the
regulations developed by the Insurance Department included several provisions which were burdensome
for accident victims, including requiring them to pay a $40 fee up front and to submit voluminous and
unnecessary paperwork. Assemblyman Diaz and Assemblyman Alexander “Pete” Grannis, Chair of the
Assembly Insurance Committee, wrote in May to object to the regulations and to urge the Department
to minimize any additional burdens on accident victims.

Protecting Retirees

The creation of Medicare in the 1960s presented an opportunity for state and local governments to save
money on health care benefits. Since the Federal program would take over some of the health insurance
costs for eligible public employees and retirees who enrolled, a law was passed requiring them to apply
for Medicare and – to ensure that they would not lose money on the deal – requiring the state to pay the
full cost of their Medicare Part B premiums. However, the Pataki administration decided last year to try
to charge public employees and retirees for a share of the Medicare premiums. Assemblyman Diaz
wrote to the Department of Civil Service in February to question the authority for this action and the
financial burdens it would impose on employees, retirees and possibly on local governments that
participate in the state health insurance plan. The proposal is currently the subject of a lawsuit by
several public employee unions.

Brownfield Cleanup Program

One of the major environmental initiatives of this decade was the 2003 enactment of the “Brownfield
Cleanup Program.” This law set forth a framework for the cleanup and reuse of the many sites
contaminated by toxic chemicals in our state. The Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC)
proposed sweeping regulations late in 2005 to implement this program. In March, Assemblyman Diaz
sent in comments pointing out the need for changes in several areas of these regulations, including the
need for tougher and more consistent soil cleanup standards and for better assessment of a cleanup
site’s impact on neighboring sites. He also criticized DEC for failing to incorporate environmental justice
principles and processes into the regulations. Assemblyman Diaz pointed out that some of the additional
measures DEC requires for permit applications in environmental justice areas are equally justified for
proposed brownfield cleanups – however, because no permit is involved there is no such requirement.
Assemblyman Diaz urged DEC to incorporate its environmental justice policy into the brownfield cleanup
program regulations.

Spray Parks

Late last year, in response to a 2005 outbreak of cryptosporidiosis at a spray ground at Seneca Lake
State Park, the Health Department issued new regulations concerning the operation of aquatic spray
grounds. Assemblyman Diaz joined several of his colleagues to voice support for the new standards,
but also to raise concerns that the Department’s approach seemed to be too inflexible with regard to
water treatment and disinfection technologies. They noted that the regulations required the use of
ultraviolet light (UV) disinfection systems, and that, although spray ground operators had indicated
that alternative methods could produce results comparable to UV systems, the agency had refused
to consider alternatives. In its response, the Department indicated that variances and waivers would
be available if it can be proved that the health and safety of the public would remain protected.

Admissions to Residential Mental Health Facilities

In April, the Office of Mental Retardation & Developmental Disabilities (OMRDD) proposed to
repeal what it called “outdated, antiquated regulations and forms” on admissions to mental health
facilities. OMRDD stated that most of the regulations were duplicative of other state or Federal laws
or regulations. However, after reviewing the rules Assemblyman Diaz contacted OMRDD in June to
advise that some of the provisions were needed to protect the rights of persons in various types of
facilities and to safeguard patients’ personal property. In addition, the Assembly ARRC Chairman
pointed out that the regulations also affected facilities supervised by the Office of Mental Health
and the Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services, and asked whether those agencies
should have a formal role in any repeal. Similar comments were made by the Mental Hygiene Legal
Service, an arm of the courts that advocates for the rights of people in the mental hygiene system.
OMRDD is reportedly considering changes in the proposal based on these comments.

Power Authority Environmental Reviews

In April, the Power Authority of the State of New York proposed amendments to update its rules
implementing the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA). SEQRA sets forth the process
for evaluating the environmental impacts of government actions. Although there were no problems with
the changes proposed by the Authority, Assemblyman Diaz commented in June on the Authority’s
failure to incorporate environmental justice principles into its SEQRA rules. He related the serious
health and safety impacts that its power plants create for his constituents in the South Bronx and in
other inner-city neighborhoods.

The Assembly ARRC Chairman noted that, in response to concerns over society’s tendency to burden
lower-income communities of color with pollution-producing facilities, the Department of Environmental
Conservation (DEC) issued an environmental justice policy in 2003 — but no other state agency or
authority had followed suit. He also pointed out that this policy commits DEC to take several additional
actions when it serves as “lead agency” on a project, but these actions are optional when someone else
is lead agency. Assemblyman Diaz called on the Power Authority to similarly commit to additional
environmental reviews and hearings when it proposes a facility in an environmental justice area.